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News acorns

March 22, 2016

lightbulbLincoln Energy Challenge partner closes

The Lincoln Energy Challenge was surprised and disappointed to learn that its partner Next Step Living has closed its doors, so Lincoln residents will no longer be able to sign up for a home energy assessment through LincolnEnergyChallenge.com. However, you can still get a free home energy assessment from MassSave.com and sign up for 100 percent renewable electricity for your home by visiting www.MassEnergy.org. To explore rooftop solar, try www.EnergySage.com and www.solarreviews.com.

Lincoln’s Green Energy Committee needs volunteers to help shape and implement the Lincoln Energy Challenge. For questions or to help in whatever way you can, please contact Sue Klem at Susan.M.Klem@gmail.com or 781-259-9304.

Scholarship application deadline coming up

The Lincoln Scholarship Committee reminds Lincoln-resident high school seniors and their families that the deadline for submitting applications for need-based college scholarships, the Sumner Smith and Fannie Campbell awards, and two Ogden Codman scholarships is Monday, April 4. Applications may be submitted to the Superintendent-Principal’s office at Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School by April 4 at 3 p.m., emailed or postmarked in U.S. mail by April 4. Further information and instructions can be found on the Lincoln Scholarship Committee’s web page.  Email LincolnScholarship@lincolntown.org with any questions.

Stay calm and improv on at library
Improv Jones.

Improv Jones Boston (click to enlarge).

Come to the the Lincoln Public Library on Saturday, April 2 from 3-4:30 p.m. for two improv groups and dessert. At 3 p.m., the improv group Truck Stop Diner will take the stage in the Tarbell Room. Formed in 2014, the group includes Zach Reisch, Kim Lapan, Nick Whalen, Jess Salpietro, Dan Whalen, Caroline McCallum and Mark Stoughton. At 3:30 p.m., Improv Jones Boston, one of the longest-running improv groups in the Boston area, will perform. The performances will be followed by dessert for all.

Learn about “shared custody” bill

Please join the Sudbury-Wayland-Lincoln Domestic Violence Roundtable for an program about the pending “shared custody” on Tuesday, April 12 at 3 p.m. in the community room of the Wayland Public Safety (38 Cochituate Rd., Wayland.) Featured speakers will be Isabelle Thacker, staff attorney at The Second Step, and Jenna Birkett, community advocate at REACH Beyond Domestic Violence.

SB 834/HB 1207 (An Act Relative to Child-Centered Custody), currently in the legislature’s Joint Committee, would impose changes on how child custody and visitation is decided in the event if divorce  laws (see this Boston Globe article). Advocates for survivors of domestic violence are among those who have voiced their opposition to this bill. Additionally, the Boston Bar Association and the Women’s Bar Association have redlined the bill, and the Massachusetts Bar Association has voiced its opposition to the bill in its entirety. Join legal experts and domestic violence advocates for a discussion of the proposed legislation and the potential impact on families struggling with domestic violence. This program is free and open to the public.

Apple orchard pruning at Gropius House

Volunteer to help revitalize the Baldwin apple trees at the Gropius House (68 Baker Bridge Rd.,) Lincoln by helping with spring pruning in the orchard on Thursday, April 14 from 10 a.m. to noon. Training by landscape manager Ezra Friedman, work gloves and tools will be provided. Required gear for working in the orchard’s meadow include tall shoes or boots, long pants, and a sun hat or rain gear depending on weather conditions. Light refreshments and tour to follow from noon-1 p.m. To register, call Shannon Ryan at 617-994-5952.

Category: news Leave a Comment

Correction

March 22, 2016

correction-smThe March 21 articles headlined “Residents vote to try for school funding again” should have said that Rep. Tom Stanley arranged a tour of the Lincoln School last summer, not Sen. Mike Barrett. Also, the second application for MSBA funding was made in  2013, not 2014. Th article has been updated to reflect these corrections.

Category: government, schools Leave a Comment

New series invites residents to create their own ‘third age’

March 22, 2016

seniorsThis spring, the Lincoln Council on Aging invites residents to create their own “third age” (life after 60) their way with a new series of presentations and discussions that meets their individual needs physically, emotionally, spiritually and legally.

While everyone is encouraged to attend all the sessions since they interrelate, residents are also welcome to come to only those presentations they wish to. The programs will feature plentiful opportunities for small and large group discussion. There is no need to sign up, except for the introductory lunch on April 8, and all programs are free.

The series will kick off on Friday, April 8 at noon with a sandwich lunch provided by Newbury Court and continue through June 10 with seven programs on a wide variety of topics. Those who would like lunch on April 8 should call the COA at 781-259-8811 to reserve their place. All programs will be held at Bemis Hall. The full schedule is as follows:

Living your purpose—your reason for being
The Rev. Lilian J. Warner, Newbury Court chaplain
Friday, April 8 – lunch at 12 p.m., presentation at 12:30 p.m.

Teaching the mind and body to communicate
Arthur Gleiner, MD and Amanda McLain, MD
Friday, April 15 at 12:30 p.m.

Regular exercise is good medicine for mind and body
Terri Zaborowski, certified group fitness instructor
Thursday, April 21 at 2:15 p.m.

Readying your legal toolbox in case of the unexpected
Sasha Golden, elder law attorney
Friday, April 22 at 12:30 p.m.

Making and communicating about tough end-of-life decisions
Sally Pastorik, Brookhaven Hospice
Friday, May 13 at 12:30 p.m.

Creating independence at home with in-home services and technology
Hector Montesino, Deaconess Abundant Life Services
Friday, May 20 at 12:30 p.m.

Living in a small space and loving it
Lyn Spaeth, Transformations (home staging and interior redesign)
Friday, June 10 at 12:30 p.m.

“Life in the ‘third age’ has unique challenges, but also new opportunities for pursuing new skills and interests and being with family and friends,” said COA Director Carolyn Bottum. “Truly, your experience is largely determined by whether you look at life through a positive or negative lens, how you take care of your health, and how well prepared you are for the unexpected. This series is designed to give people the information they need to have the best ‘third age’ possible while also offering lots of time for discussion to share wisdom and life experiences with others.”

For more information, call the COA at 781-259-8811.

Category: health and science, seniors Leave a Comment

Residents vote to try for school funding again

March 21, 2016

schoolBy Alice Waugh

The town will apply for the fourth time for state funding for a comprehensive school building project after residents overwhelmingly voted to authorize it at Town Meeting on March 19.

A year ago, residents authorized the third application to the Massachusetts School Building Authority (MSBA) and to set aside $750,000 for a feasibility study in the event that the Lincoln School was invited into the funding pipeline. However, the MSBA turned down Lincoln’s request in December 2015, and a 2013 application was also turned down. The MSBA gave conditional funding in 2012 but the project failed to win residents’ support.

Last summer, in a visit that state Sen. Michael Barrett helped to arrange, numerous officials from both the MSBA and the town toured the school to see the facilities issues first-hand. Although this year’s funding bid was ultimately unsuccessful, the MSBA “assured us that our statement of interest that was thorough and they understood the needs of our building,” said School Committee chair Jennifer Glass. “I believe we made a pretty compelling case that day that we had come together as a town.”

In 2015, there were 97 applications to the MSBA’s core program (the segment dealing with substantial renovation or reconstruction of schools); 26 were chosen for further consideration and eight were invited into the funding pipeline in December, though more are expected to be invited in later this year, Glass said.

MSBA officials told Glass and Superintendent of Schools Becky McFall that last year’s funding applicants included many schools that were faced with overcrowding or the possible loss of accreditation because of their physical condition, Glass said, adding that they encouraged Lincoln to apply again.

“Partnering with the MSBA is fiscally responsible and we believe it’s worth the wait,” she said.

A vote against Article 28 (pursuing MSBA funding again) and a “yes” vote on Article 29 would have authorized the town to spend last year’s $750,000 allocation on a feasibility study for a project funded solely by the town.

Glass acknowledged that there was no guarantee that the MSBA would invite Lincoln into the funding process next year, raising the question of when Lincoln should turn to its own resources.

“There’s not a clear answer as to that deadline—it’s a topic we struggle with,” she said. “But for right now, we can afford to be patient… the building certainly has its deficiencies, but it’s not going to fall on our heads, and we’re going to keep it safe.”

In the past couple of years, the school’s most urgent facilities needs have been funded by appropriations from the Capital Planning Committee. “We have had a few projects that really were dire,” McFall said, referring to a project last year that replaced electric switching gear, “so we’ve taken back the fear that the electrical system would go down and we would not be able to restart it again,” she said. “It backed us off the cliff a bit,”

SImilarly, there were fears that the smokestack outside the Brooks auditorium was in danger of falling gown, but money was allocated to inspect it and perform some repairs, “so we’re assured we’ll get through at least the next couple of years, and we’ll keep inspecting it,” McFall said.

The school roof is on ongoing concern. “Whenever we have a rainstorm, the buckets come out. It’s not going to fall in, but it leaks consistently,” McFall said.

Not everyone in agreement

But a few residents at the meeting were not in favor of applying for state funding yet again.

“I’m not particularly comfortable with that,” said Adam Greenberg. “The MSBA has its own view of things that may not include Lincoln in a year. I find this merry-go-round where we keep grabbing for the MSBA brass ring to be unsuccessful. I don’t see this as a way forward in a realistic sense.”

Greenberg suggested applying one more time but then planning to pursue a different course if the town is unsuccessful with the MSBA once again.

“To have the strongest case, we need to show that we recognize that [passing Article 28] is the way forward to achieving both facilities and educational needs,” Glass said. “I think it’s really important right now to show we understand how important help from the state is, and that’s what will make it a viable project.”

“The message from town needs to be overwhelming in favor of Article 28,” said Vincent Cannistraro, who urged a “resounding no” on Article 29 as well. “I don’t feel passing over 29 goes far enough,” he said. If it looked like residents were willing to go it alone without state funding, “what would you do if you were the MSBA? I think the message needs to be consistent,” he said.

Cannistraro’s position was an evolution from his stance in 2014, when he ran against incumbent Selectman Peter Braun. At the time, citing his construction background, he disputed the notion that a new school would cost $50 million and repairs would cost $30-$40 million.

It would be wrong to send the message that “we’re not even going to try without state help,” another resident said. “I can imagine then passing us over again. I don’t think we should be waiting to find out whether we can possible get help from the government. I would find it hard to believe that if we don’t get [a funding invitation] next year, we’re going to get it again” the following year, she said.

Last week, the Board of Selectmen as well as the Finance, Capital Planning and School Committees unanimously recommended passage of Article 28.

“We’ve got to show patience and tenacity here,” Selectman Noah Eckhouse said. “As a matter of history, we got invited [into the funding process] before we were really ready” in 2012.

Residents will get to vote on school configuration

One reason for 2012 school project’s failure to garner the necessary two-thirds majority is that many residents objected to the new layout of the school and campus in the “preferred option” approved by the MSBA. However, “the MSBA did not impose anything on us,” Glass said.

The town’s feasibility study identified 11 different options for the school, and for reasons of construction phasing and greater energy efficiency, “there was sort of a fork in the road” where the School Building Committee (SBC) opted to go with a different building configuration,” Glass said.

“A major mistake we made in 2012 was that when the SBC was trying to decide between different directions, there were outreach and information sessions, but no formal town vote saying ‘A or B, what do you like?’ and then we’d give it to MSBA,” Glass said. This time, “whatever process we’re in, we will not go forward with a preferred option until we have come to the town and said, ‘Here are some choices; let’s collectively agree on that concept before we get into final details of design’.”

“It’s not just about the money,” Cannistraro said. “If the town went on its own with the Lincoln Way, we’d finish three years later and that $30 million would turn into $60 million in a heartbeat and we wouldn’t get something as nice.” When it comes to building schools, “that’s [the MSBA’s] area of expertise and that’s the most important reason we need the.”

Category: government, school project*, schools Leave a Comment

Letter to the editor: information on Japanese knotweed

March 21, 2016

letter

To the editor,

At Town Meeting on March 19, there was discussion of Japanese knotweed and using chemical herbicide to deal with it. The Gardens section of the March 18 Financial Times has a fascinating article on the global history of the plant. Two excerpts for your info:

“This is a plant that is perfectly adapted for world domination. It grows rapidly from an incredibly strong rootstock, so robust it is capable of pushing through tarmac and, reputedly, through concrete and building foundations. Try to dig it out and you’ll find the roots go down deep and are near [sic] impossible to remove by hand.  Leave a tiny fragment of root behind and—boom—back it comes.  Allowed to spread unchallenged, it can colonize vast areas, not only potentially causing damage to the built environment but also wiping out native plants and displacing the wildlife that relies on them…

“How to beat the pest: if Japanese knotweed is on your property, seek specialist know-how…. Control of the pest often involves chemical herbicide whose application requires careful timing to coincide with flowering if it is to work effectively. One cycle of herbicide is unlikely to make any significant impact and, typically, treatment can continue for two or three years…”

I wish our Conservation Commission luck and hope they will consider posting sightings of the pest so neighbors can be on the lookout.

Sincerely,

Roy Harvey
Stonehedge Road


Letters to the editor must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Letters will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Letters containing personal attacks, errors of fact or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: agriculture and flora, government 1 Comment

Voters OK buying land for possible solar swap

March 20, 2016

The lighter green protion of the Hargreaves-Heald property will be purchased by the town for conservation land.

The lighter-green portion of the Hargreaves-Heald property will be purchased by the town for conservation land.

By Alice Waugh

Thanks to a vote at the March 19 Town Meeting, Lincoln will buy a new piece of conservation land that could be used as part of a “land swap” with the state to allow a solar array to be built on the capped landfill.

Voters approved spending $225,000 on a three-acre portion of the seven-acre Hargreaves-Heald property in Sandy Pond Road, which includes the meadow just to the east of the Old Town Hall Exchange. Converting the three acres into town-owned conservation land means that it will be preserved as open space and that the town can run a conservation trail through it.

The purchase was one of 11 projects to be funded by a Community Preservation Committee (CPC) allocation of $897,882. Housing and recreation reserves brought the total for the CPC measure (which was approved with a few “nay” votes) to $1,030,162.

According to state law, if the town decides to remove the conservation designation from a parcel such as the landfill for purposes of installing a solar array, it must compensate by designating an equivalent amount of other land as conservation property. While a solar array will not be proposed for the Hargreaves-Heald land itself, that land could potentially be “swapped” for the landfill in exchange for permission to site a solar array on the landfill conservation land.

The idea of putting solar panels on the landfill site was discussed at the State of the Town meeting in November 2015, though no concrete proposals have been put forth yet.

Green Energy Committee chair John Snell proposed amending the CPC motion to specify that the Hargreaves-Heald purchase could be counted as a conservation land swap in a future application to the state. “It would really help if this was an option… it would be a good forward-thinking thing to do,” he said.

Town officials huddle in front of Town Counsel Joel Bard to craft amended wording for the Hargreaves-Heald motion as Town Moderator Sarah Cannon Holden (left) waits.

Town officials huddle in front of Town Counsel Joel Bard to craft amended wording for the Hargreaves-Heald motion as Town Moderator Sarah Cannon Holden (left) waits. 

After a lengthy on-stage huddle among Lincoln officials, Town Counsel Joel Bard drafted amended wording for the motion. “It’s just a paper designation, if you will—the acquisition and use of the parcel is not going to change,” he said, adding that the amendment conferred “the option but not the obligation” to use the property as part of a future conservation land swap.

“We’ve done such a good job with conservation land that we don’t really have any fungible municipal land” to use in a swap, said Selectman Noah Eckhouse, who along with Snell is a members of the Landfill Solar Steering Committee. “The state is trying to keep towns from cracking into conservation land they already have.”

 

Category: conservation, government, land use 2 Comments

Town Meeting news acorns

March 20, 2016

ballotThe Lincoln Squirrel will publish more stories about the March 19 Town Meting in coming days. Meanwhile, here are a few other warrant articles that were discussed.

Ballot questions

There will be two questions on the March 28 town election ballot that were also discussed at Town Meeting:

  • A request for $320,000 for the Department of Public Works to buy a new street sweeper ($215,000) and an articulated loader ($105,000). The loader is a smaller vehicle used for plowing sidewalks and bike paths as well as trimming roadside vegetation.
  • A request for a Proposition 2½ override to pay for Lincoln’s share of the new Minuteman High School. This question, which was placed on the ballot pending the town’s decision on whether to withdraw from the Minuteman school district, is now moot. Residents voted at a February 23 Special Town Meeting to withdraw. Though the town will still have a representative on the Minuteman School Committee until July 2017, it will not be liable as a member town for the new building’s capital costs.
Conservation Commission funding

A motion to allow the Conservation Commission to spend $25,000 on several land stewardship projects passed at Town Meeting, though not without some “nay” votes.

The money, which comes from fees paid to the town by people who leave conservation land for agricultural purposes, will go toward repairing the muster field colvert so it can safely hold a tractor and emergency vehicles, as well as the upper Browning Field bridge. Other projects covered by the appropriation are plantings to screen the solar panels in Far Meadow near Lincoln Woods, setting up six deer “exclosures” for studying how vegetation burned in last year’s fire near Sandy Pond; doing an inventory of invasive Japanese knotweed; and controlling phragmites that grow in wetlands, especially on the Sudbury River.

It was this last project that caused some controversy, as several residents objected to possible use of chemicals to kill the phragmites. Conservation Commission chair Peter von Mertens said the preferred method would be to cut the phragmites and then cover the area with light-proof cloth to prevent regrowth, but Conservation DIrector Thomas Gumbart acknowledged that herbicides are also an option.

Right-to-farm bylaw

The town passed over an article that considered amending the 2011 right-to-farm zoning by-law to add parties who are permitted to farm by right in Lincoln and to add agricultural uses permitted by right on parcels of less than five acres.

The Agricultural Commission (AgComm) hoped to propose the changes because more and more people are doing farming on a small scale, such as raising chickens in their backyards. The group drafted some amendments to the by-law but decided to get more community input on what sort of limits there should be, such as whether there should be a limit on agricultural uses or revenue for homeowners on properties under five acres.

“We want to craft it so it won’t alarm people and so we have the proper parameters put on operations,” AgComm member Ari Kurtz said the day after Town Meeting. The AgComm has a study group examine the current agricultural by-laws, and Kurtz invited anyone interested in joining the group to email agcom@lincolnton.org.

Currently there are 16 commercial farms in Lincoln on about 500 acres of land, he said. Lincoln farms raise fruits and vegetables and livestock including chickens, cows, sheep, alpacas, but also wine grapes, horses for riding and therapy, and bees for honey and wax.

Category: conservation, government Leave a Comment

Budget approved; property taxes to drop by 0.5%

March 20, 2016

moneyBy Alice Waugh

At Saturday’s Town Meeting, residents approved a fiscal 2017 general government budget of $35.13 million, which will result in an decrease in the median property tax bill of about 0.7 percent, even after factoring in a $320,000 capital exclusion for buying DPW equipment.

The for fiscal 2017 is estimated at $13,204 based on a median property value of $939,500 in fiscal 2016, according to Finance Committee chair Peyton Marshall. It will be one of the lowest rates of increase in the past 12 years.

Tax bills for Lincoln residential property owners has risen an average of 4.5 percent since 1999, the second-lowest rate of increase among eight area towns. Although Lincoln has had the second-highest average annual tax bill during that time, it also had the cohort’s third-lowest tax rate in 2016.

Town Meeting also approved adding $284,084 to the town’s debt stabilization fund, which is drawn upon periodically to smooth the tax impact of significant capital funding, such as the expected school and community center projects, Marshall explained.

The excess from the Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School appropriation will also added to the fund. The amount will not be determined until after the assessment but is estimated at $489,000, Marshall said.

Before Saturday, the fund’s total stood at $3.1 million, so the additions will bring it up to about $3.8 million. If about $3.4 million is applied to the town budget during a period when the tax burden from debt repayment from the future school building project is greatest, the maximum year-over-year increase in property tax bills would go down from 10% to 4.3%, Marshall said.

Category: government Leave a Comment

Town Meeting applauds service of Eckhouse and others

March 20, 2016

Selectmen Noah Eckhouse (right) and Peter Braun at last year's Fourth of July parade in Lincoln.

Selectmen Noah Eckhouse (right) and Peter Braun at last year’s Fourth of July parade in Lincoln.

By Alice Waugh

At an Annual Town Meeting notable for relatively little controversy, attendees were at their noisiest during several standing ovations for fellow Lincoln residents who have given volunteer service to the town in various capacities.

The most prominent retiree was Selectman Noah Eckhouse, who decided not to run for a third three-year term (James Craig is running unopposed for the vacant seat). Selectman Peter Braun paid tribute to “the fun-loving Noah, the high-energy, full of life Noah, the Noah who brings his A game to everything he does.”

Eckhouse played a key role in the Town Office Building renovation project, Braun noted. “Noah put blood, sweat and tears into that building… this was a true labor of love and we are the true beneficiaries of a building that will last a long, long time.”

Town Administrator Tim Higgins also praised Eckhouse as “the town cheerleader and chief tone-setter” who motivated town employees, “empowering them and encouraging them to do their best work.” Both Higgins and Braun also highlighted the entire Eckhouse family’s commitment to public service.

“Noah’s been a voice in favor of giving continuous support to our volunteer culture, and we should be as grateful if not even more so for that than for the building,” Higgins said.

After thanking his colleagues and family, Eckhouse offered some advice to his fellow Lincolnites, exhorting them to keep uncivil discourse out of Lincoln, to provide solutions rather than identifying problems, and to get involved rather than default to inaction.

“Not to decide is to decide,” he said. “Consider the cost of doing nothing. Sometimes our desire to utterly dissect a decision stops us dead in our tracks. I argue that our most precious asset is not money or land or the Lincoln Way—it is our volunteer energy. Squandering that resource is something we all must guard against. Consider the opportunity cost when raising an issue.” (The full text of Eckhouse’s remarks is available here.)

Other volunteers who were recognized for their service at Town Meeting:

  • Andy Beard, who is stepping down after 15 years on the Capital Planning Committee. “I got more by serving than I gave to the town,” he said. “I got a deeper understanding of how the town works and built a set of personal relationships I wil value for many years.” He encouraged others to get involved in town service as the best way to follow the dictum “think globally, act locally.”
  • Jim Meadors, who is leaving the Conservation Commission after 12 years (11 of them as co-chair). The other co-chair, Peter Von Mertens, praised Meadors’s knowledge of natural history, hard work and dedication. “If you ever wondered who it is that picks up roadside trash, cleared all the windblown plastic bags off the fences at the Transfer Station, and stops in the middle of jogging to pick up micro trash on the trail, that’s Jim,” he said.
  • Bryce Wolf, who is stepping down after 10 years on the Planning Board. “All I can say is, what a long strange trip it’s been,” Wolf said. “Ive met a lot of very wonderful and very interesting people, and I really encourage to get involved in the town because you’ll never regret it.”
  • Retired Town Clerk Nancy Zuelke, who received the town’s annual Bright Light Award. Zuelke, who remains active with the Council on Aging and helping out at town elections, said, “I always thought [the award] was for someone with a bright idea and I’ve had no bright ideas. I’m just letting my light shine, that’s all.”
  • Deborah Dorsey, who is stepping down after 10 years on the Disability Commission. Dorsey was not able to attend Town Meeting.

Several of the honored volunteers have moved on to other important town offices for the coming year, however. Eckhouse and Beard were elected fence viewers, while Dorsey, Meadors and Wolf were elected Measurers of Wood and Bark.

Category: charity/volunteer, government Leave a Comment

Letter to the editor: Brooks seeks reelection as Town Clerk

March 20, 2016

letter

To the editor:

It has been my privilege and my pleasure to serve as your Town Clerk for the past ten years. I will again be a candidate for the office at the town election on Monday, March 28. I ask for your vote.

My view of the Town Meeting form of government as the purest form of direct democracy continues to obtain, as does my observation that it is also surely the most labor intensive for its citizens. I remain moved and energized by the role of the Town Clerk’s Office in that effort—as a gateway for resident inquiry; a repository of town data; the chronicler, conservator, and certifier of “official acts;” a resource for local officials; the administrator of elections; and as a tender of the town’s cemeteries and those families who have need of them.

I invite you to read more about the office’s activities in the year past and aspirations for the years ahead in this year’s Annual Town Report. Or check out the new and expanded Town Clerk pages on the town’s website.

I look forward to seeing you at the town election on Monday, March 28.

Sincerely,

Susan F. Brooks
138 Bedford Rd.


Letters to the editor must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Letters will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Letters containing personal attacks, errors of fact or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: government, letters to the editor Leave a Comment

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